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Whose Side Is the White House On?
In a speech given on November 20, 2010 at the ADA Education Fund’s Post-election Conference at the Harvard Kennedy School, Galbraith asks who Obama is really working for, and demands that progressives seek leaders who will fight the good fight.
I want to raise a hard question — a question on which Americans are divided. It seems to me, though, we will get nowhere unless we realize where we are, what has actually happened, and what the future most likely holds.
Recovery begins with realism and there is nothing to be gained by kidding ourselves. On the topics that I know most about, the administration is beyond being a disappointment. It’s beyond inept, unprepared, weak, and ineffective. Four and again two years ago, the people demanded change. As a candidate, the President promised change. In foreign policy and the core economic policies, he delivered continuity instead. That was true on Afghanistan and it was and is true in economic policy, especially in respect to the banks. What we got was George W. Bush’s policies without Bush’s toughness, without his in-your-face refusal to compromise prematurely. Without what he himself calls his understanding that you do not negotiate with yourself.
It’s a measure of where we are, I think, that at a meeting of Americans for Democratic Action, you find me comparing President Obama unfavorably to President George W. Bush.
In economic policy it was said earlier we have a lack of narrative. This afternoon, Gregory King asked why the people didn’t know that the Republican Party is uniformly and massively opposed to job programs, to state and local assistance, and to every legislative measure that might aid and promote economic recovery from the worst crisis and recession in modern times. Why is that that they didn’t know? Could it have anything to do with the fact that the White House didn’t tell them?
And why was that?
The president deprived himself of any chance to develop a narrative from the beginning by surrounding himself with holdover appointments from the Bush and even the Clinton administrations: Secretary Geithner, Chairman Bernanke, and, since we’re here at Harvard, I’ll call him by his highest title, President Summers. These men have no commitment to the base, no commitment to the Democratic Party as a whole, no particular commitment to Barack Obama, and none to the broad objective of national economic recovery that can be detected from their actions.
With this team the President also chose to cover up economic crime. Not only has the greatest wave of financial fraud in our history gone largely uninvestigated and unpunished, the government and this administration with its stress tests (which were fakes), its relaxation of accounting standards which permitted banks to hold toxic assets on their books at far higher prices than any investor would pay, with its failure to make criminal referrals where these were clearly warranted, with its continuation in office — sometimes in acting capacities — of some of the leading non-regulators of the earlier era, has continued an ongoing active complicity in financial fraud. And the perpetrators, of course, prospered as never before: reporting profits that they would not have been able to report under honest accounting standards and converting tax payer support into bonuses; while at the same time cutting back savagely on loans to businesses and individuals, and ramping up foreclosures, much of that accomplished with forged documents and perjured affidavits.
Could the President and his administration have done something? Yes, they could have. Where was the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation? Why did they choose not to implement the law — the Prompt Corrective Action law — which requires the federal government to take into receivership financial institutions when there is a significant risk of large taxpayer losses to the insurance fund? Where were the FBI and the Department of Justice? Did the President do anything? No. Is he doing anything now? No. Why not? The most likely answer is that he did not want to. My understanding, in fact, is that there was one meeting where this issue was raised, and the President stated that his economic team had assured him they had the situation under control.
On the larger economic policy front, the White House gave away the game from the beginning. How? First by guessing at the scale of the disaster. When leading economic advisers (I believe, in fact, it was President Summers) announced that the unemployment rate would peak at 8%, they not only guessed wrong, but gave away the right to assign responsibility to the previous administration when things got worse. This was either elementary bad politics or deliberate self-sabotage. But it gets worse. The optimistic forecast helped to justify a weak program. Useful things were done, but not nearly enough to convey the impression of a forceful policy to the broader public. Then once the banks were taken care of and the stock market took off again, it seems clear that the team at the White House didn’t care anymore.
Again, could they have done differently? Of course. The President could have told the truth, which is that we faced a historic meltdown, a collapse of the core financial institutions of our economy, and that we had really no way of knowing how bad economic conditions might get or how long this would endure and that therefore the situation would require a full mobilization: all resources, all hands on deck, major departures of policy, no holding back, and the responsibility for trouble and failure falling plainly on those who would obstruct the course. None of the people he chose to advise him on economic policy was remotely capable of thinking in those terms.
We’ve learned from Vic Fingerhut and Mike Lux that the administration went down in public esteem when people realized it was working for the banks and not for them. Why did they think this? Why did they go from “blaming Bush and Wall Street to blaming Obama and Wall Street”? Because plainly they could see what was in front of their faces. Except in manner, President Bush never really pretended to be a President for ordinary folks; President Obama did. Bush was who he was; Obama held out, fostered, and promoted vast hopes, mobilizing the American population behind his leadership on that basis. And he disappointed those hopes — to use a very harsh word, one could say he has betrayed those hopes. How can one therefore blame the voters for acting as they have acted?
What happens next? Let’s again not kid ourselves, we have lost a great many seats in the House of Representatives and the House of Representatives isn’t coming back into a Democratic majority in the near future. Simply because of the balance of exposures — the larger numbers of Democratic Senators exposed to reelection in the next cycle, the greatest likelihood is that the Senate will also go Republican in two years time. President Obama has set his course. He has surrounded himself with the advisers of his choice and as he moves to replace President Summers we hear from the press that the priority is to “repair the rift with his investors on Wall Street.” What does that tell you? It tells me that he does not have President Clinton’s fighting and survival instincts. I’ve not heard one good reason all day to believe that we are going to see from this White House the fight that we want, that he could win in two years, or any reason we should be backing him now.
The Democratic Party has become too associated with Wall Street. This is a fact. It is a structural problem. It seems to me that we as progressives need — this is my personal position — we need to draw a line and decide that we would be better off with an under-funded, fighting progressive minority party than a party marked by obvious duplicity and constant losses on every policy front as a result of the reversals in our own leadership.
What is at stake in the long run? Two things, mainly, in my view. First, it seems to me that we as progressives need to make an honorable defense of the great legacies of the New Deal and Great Society — programs and institutions that brought America out of the Great Depression and bought us through the Second World War, brought us to our period of greatest prosperity, and the greatest advances in social justice. Social Security, Medicare, housing finance — the front-line right now is the foreclosure crisis, the crisis, I should say, of foreclosure fraud — the progressive tax code, anti-poverty policy, public investment, public safety, and human and civil rights. We are going to lose these battles– get used to it. But we need to make an honorable fight, to state clearly what our principles are and to lay down a record which is trustworthy for the future.
Beyond this, bold proposals are what we should be advancing now; even when they lose, they have their value. We can talk about job programs; we can talk about an infrastructure bank; we can talk about Juliet Schor’s idea of a four-day work week; we can talk about my idea of expanding Social Security and creating an early retirement option so that people who are older and unemployed or anxious to get out of the labor force can leave on comfortable terms, and so create job openings for younger people who, as we’ve heard today, are facing very long periods of extremely aggravating and frustrating unemployment; we can talk about establishing a systematic program of general revenue sharing to support state and local governments, we can talk about the financial restructuring we so desperately need and that we’ll have to have if we are going to have a country which has a viable private credit system and in which large financial power is not constantly dictating the terms of every political maneuver.
We are not going to get these things, but we should have a clearly defined program so that people know what they are. And then, frankly, as was said earlier today, said most elegantly by Jeff Madrick, in the long run we need to recognize that the fate of the entire country is at stake. Its governance can’t be entrusted indefinitely to incompetents, hacks, and lobbyists. Large countries can and do fail, they have done so in our own time. And the consequences are very grave: drastic declines in services, in living standards, in life expectancies, huge increases in social tension, in repression, and in violence. These are the consequences of following through with crackpot ideas such as those embodied in the Bowles-Simpson deficit commission, as Jeff Madrick again outlined, such notions as putting arbitrary limits on the scale of government, or arbitrary limits on the top tax rate affecting the wealthiest Americans.
This isn’t a parlor game. The outcome isn’t destined to be alright. It will not necessarily end in progress whatever happens. What we do, how we proceed, and how we effectively resist what is plainly about to happen, matters very greatly for the future of our country, of our children, and of another generation to come. We need to lose our fear, our hesitation, and our unwillingness to face the facts. If we thereby lose some of our hopes, let’s remember the dictum of William of Orange that “it is not necessary to hope in order to persevere.”
The President should know that, as Lincoln said to the Congress in the dark winter of 1862, he “cannot escape history.” And we are heading now into a very dark time, so let’s face it with eyes open. And if we must, let’s seek leadership that shares our values, fights for our principles, and deserves our trust.
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113 Comments so far
Show All"It seems to me that we as progressives need — this is my personal position — we need to draw a line and decide that we would be better off with an under-funded, fighting progressive minority party ....."
Alright, Galbraith! Finally, a "progressive guru" who's talking 3rd party, not as a possibility but a necessity ....
Let's hope more will jump on the bandwagon ....
Read the article quickly and scanned it again --
WHERE is he saying move to "3rd party"?
I'd be all for that --
We have a huge liberal/progressive voting bloc and we should use it!
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
You know, you're right, as in correct. In my enthusiasm I assumed that because this statement was made right after these - "The Democratic Party has become too associated with Wall Street. This is a fact. It is a structural problem." - that he was talking about progressives having their own party, but I see now this is not necessarily what he means. Perhaps he is just telling Dems they must cut their ties to Wall Street, which, obviously, would leave them "underfunded". Still, it does seem a bit, if only a tad, closer to calling for a progressive revolt, but i guess I was a bit too quick to "count him in" ....
Oh well, a little cold water in the face is a good thing, i suppose, Thanx .....
Dr. Galbraiths distinction - between either a 3rd party of a Democratic party that becomes an underfunded genuinely leftist minority party, is not a particularly significant one.
Assuming we continue with our terrible winner take all, constituent district-based electoral syatem (as opposed to runoff based, proportional represntation system, then a transformed Democratic Party would surely be the better strategy. But the old saying about sows ears and silk purses, or the other one bout such an animal flying, come to mind.
Same here.
Nevertheless, the third party route is clearly the right one to take.
I'd bet that, with some outreach and groundwork, enough indies and conservatives could be won over. WIth that said, you can expect that, among others, the DEC (Democratic Entertainment Committee) of Maher, Moore, Maddow, Olbermann (+-), Stewart, the kids at The Nation, and the rest, to have a total breakdown, hissy-fit. It would surely be a job keeping the democratic riff-raff out.
Progressives have worked time and time again electing democratic candidates while their #1 candidate of all time, now takes a (another) big public dump on those who gave him his job. The democratic party cannot win without progressives. Take 'em down and watch them run straight into the republican's loving arms, then lets see what happens. (provided they don't start fucking killing people, which they all seem to love to do these days.)
Its time to split this bad and ugly relationship, baby.
Actually, I've done a bit of rethinking and it seems to me that although one cannot automatically assume that Galbraith, himself, in this piece, was touting a third, progressive, party, the phrases he uses to express his disaffection with the Dems are powerful enough and clear enough to justify using his logic, and his words, when encouraging folks like him to join such an effort. He has obviously abandoned the "lesser of 2 evils" argument when he says he is prepared to "lose", for some time even, and be "underfunded" - in other words turn his back on the major reasons given by too many "progressives" for sticking with the Dems.
This willingness to "lose" in the name of principle is a tipping point - one can still try to "reform" the Dems, via primaries, but when that fails as it usually does, one feels not only free to, but "required" to, switch to a progressive 3rd party in the elections.
I return to being a bit more enthusiastic about Galbraith's article. If he represents the thinking of more and more "progressive" leaders, I see a pinhole of light that may be growing ....
Galbraith understates the magnitude of the damage Obama is inflicting upon 98% of Americans each day.
While Galbraith talks about lost opportunities for Obama to ENHANCE Social Security, Obama's deficit reduction commission is working overtime to start uravelling the EXISTING Social Security program and Obama is cutting deals with Republicans to start a "temporary payroll tax holiday" that will defund the EXISTING Social Security program. Republicans have publicly stated that whenever the Democrats attempt to end the "temporary payroll tax holiday" they will scream TAX HIKE and defunding Socail Security will be permanent thereby signing the death certificate for Social Security.
I do think he's calling for a third party--he compares what that party might be like (underfunded, fighting, minority) compared to the Democratic Party that is "marked by obvious duplicity and constant losses on every policy front as a result of the reversals in our own leadership."
I'm with Donna (although this graf could be read as either a call to purge or go 3rd party) but the purge option would be nigh on to impossible since the DLC hacks run everything.
"The Democratic Party has become too associated with Wall Street. This is a fact. It is a structural problem. It seems to me that we as progressives need — this is my personal position — we need to draw a line and decide that we would be better off with an under-funded, fighting progressive minority party than a party marked by obvious duplicity and constant losses on every policy front as a result of the reversals in our own leadership."
I agree. The only way a "3rd party" succeeds is by splitting off from an already established party (Repubs-from-Whigs), or purges of existing party (essentially what's happened to Dems; 70's purges purging out FDR dems to become a wallstreet party. And Repubs purging Eisenhower Repubs to become an american fascist party).
So basically yeah, he's saying "Throw out the goddamn Democrat sellouts. Treasonous bastards!" (and drag rahm into a back ally, chicago-style). Make them pay for their treason. THEN they can REALLY wade into the repub fascists Gen. Patton-style. Lets call it "tough love". General W. T. Sherman understood the necessity of making people pay DEARLY for their stubborn persistence in error.
Yes, he is a liberal . He states very bluntly in "The Predator State" that he wants capitalism to work , he doesn't want to dismantle it at all.
But I do like his forceful championing of quality of life issues, especially in respect to wanting governments to make jobs a primary policy issue.
Thing is, the system aint made that way. It can't be 'saved'. Those with the power and the money don't want to stop exploiting and wasting money and they especially don't give a flying fuck about the people, even if they starve.
That is what people are reluctant to face, so they flounder around grasping at any ideas for a way to escape facing the plain truth:
"The system can't be 'saved'. Those with the power and the money don't want to stop exploiting and wasting money and they especially don't give a flying fuck about the people, even if they starve."
Yes! Yes, and yes, to a truly progressive, rational third party.
Aquifer again, pushing for a third party...I smell a rat!
I smell 2, which one did you have in mind ....
Julian Assange has helped augment a Truth Revolution! Yesterday Glen Ford laid it all out without any gloves on, and here comes James K. Galbraith also "saying it like it is!" David Michael Green is beginning to see through the mass illusion, while Chris Hedges reliably leads the pack.
This idea of putting forth an agenda that may not win now, but will set up a foundation for a better future, is a lot better than going along with the corrupt duopoly; or believing there ARE no other possible options.
Tangential aside SR...
I put together a time line of the commentary from Glen Ford and Bruce Dixon on that other thread. Thanks to you and to Loren for bringing that to my attention by asking when did this start, what are the dates? Reading through that time line, I am convinced that "where there is smoke, there is fire." There is more to this story. How did such a political unknown skyrocket to such power so quickly? What were those meetings with the DLC and Wall Street people all about, back when he was merely a relatively unknown and inexperienced local politician in Chicago?
This is a very clear description of our economic problems and their mishandling by the Obama administration. I agree that progressives should hold out the concept of a better way even if all their ideals will not soon be realized.
Barry is Ronnie Reagan pretending to be a Democrat, which makes him even more dishonest than Ronnie. He apparently has some of the love of power too, and, though it may be politically incorrect to say it, there is some "little man in big shoes" in there as well. So perhaps the best approximation of Barry made from a composite of former presidents is Ronnie + Tricky Dick, with a pinch of little emperor W thrown in -- Barry W. Milhous Reagan.
From now on we should just refer to him Barry. "Barack" is just a good stage name, that amplifies his image and public persona as a "community activist", "transformational candidate", or "man-of-the-left". Barry Dunham, just one of the guys.
People always spring forth and strike for a leadership position after the damage is done. The problems we all face are much worse than even progressive writers perceive. You are about to reap what you have sewn. Unfortunately for you life is not linear. Before the end of 2011, the reality will be made clear to all. The best advice I can give you now is to keep paying your sewer bill.
Hey Raydelcamino,
Excellent post! You are the first blogger to emphasize the danger to Social Security with this "TEMPORARY" 2% decrease in the payroll tax. I've said that failure to support Social Security was my line in the sand when it came to possibly voting for Obama again and now that line has been crossed.
I'M DONE! Of course I'm going to have to take a lot of flak from my Obamabot friends and relatives who will hold me personally responsible for the election of President Palin but I don't care. At least it will be entertaining. As George Carlin said, it's front row at the freak show.
Um, you should read economist Dr Michael Hudson's article from yesterday on Obama's disastrous policies and how they will effect SS and just about everything else:
http://www.counterpunch.org/hudson12082010.html
Game Plan for a Flat Tax, Social Security Cutbacks and Austerity
Obama's Sellout on Taxes
By MICHAEL HUDSON
malatesta1936 December 9th, 2010 4:44 pm
Very good. If what Michael Hudson said is true, we are in for a lot of Change which we did not ask for from Obama. Thanks.
It is sad when one doesn't think ideas and truth and good sense in the national interest, can win political contests--I DISAGREE. Good sense, sound logic, and policy designed to keep a ship from sinking can and will win if people stop signing on to corrupt parties or retreat to bunkers to ride out the storm.
Jerry Brown, almost won a national election in 1992,(he is now governor of California), Hawaii has just sworn in a very progressive governor(his win was a real (true) landslide) and history tells us that the anti slave party(republicans of 1850's) took the white house in a four way race in 1860-- just a few years after the new parties creation-- note I said a NEW PARTY!!! Not a third party, not a personality party, not an anti-party- but a party fully aware that history and the majority of the people want and will support sound, truthful and competent leadership, and policies that are for the people.
This forum is a place to start- and please note; republican party creators of 1854 did not name their new coalition, new whigs, anti whigs or the copperheads. For a new party to win, it must have a platform that trumps and controls the standard bearer- no more parties that cave to personality or money- it must be one with an agenda.
Thank you, Marc. Very well stated. I completely agree.
... like the Oregon Progressive Party. Their site is currently down. See this link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oregon_Progressive_Party
Nothing about U.S. militarism and its effects, to the world as well as to the U.S. social and economic systems. And with Obama leading the gruesome charge towards destruction for all but the profiteers.
"mkb29"
Thank you.
I read through all of this looking for a reference to the tyrannosaurus in the room.
While this article mentions many important issues, it fails to take its own advise about being accurate.
The title alone is pathetic in its uncertainty.
We need to be aware that the reason the military is so busy crushing "insurgencies" is because our insatiable greed causes others to see the United States of Global Domination as repugnant and oppressive. This nation is bankrupting itself in every way possible.
Why not talk about direct democracy, with no professional politicians?
And what about career public servants. How do we rein in their influence? They are very powerful people who are not elected.
We the People can do anything we want. The people united will never be defeated:
http://ni4d.us/
Yes, well, at least that's the lovely fiction they taught us in school.
Find out how the Swiss do it here:
http://ni4d.us/
heh. To do it as the Swiss do it, you have to be sitting on the ill-gotten gains of every war criminal and mass murderer on the planet in your numbered, no-interest-paying bank accounts.
Then you even have the freedom be the last nation on earth to grant women the franchise.
Ezeflyer:
Why not, indeed? Add a redefined, less imperial presidency subject to votes of confidence, a true 'executive' charged with administering programs ordered by the voters.
It seems that you and I are the only true democrats left.
I guess we can always talk to each other, at least.
Keep talking
All this talk about economics will not mean a thing UNLESS the economics of Permanent War are factored in. The Democrats DO NOT have any credibility so long as they continue to support America's standing policy of Permanent War. We need REAL Peace Time Economics NOT the all too often unmentioned Permanent War Economy the Duopoly keeps funding
off our backs!
p.s.- Galbraith's example of Clinton's political survival instincts, the same self-serving nature which betrayed the Democratic base with his triangulation politics and introduced the Rubin-led repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act which enabled the mass deregulation of high-risk speculative finance with its assets bubbles, is truly pathetic.
Thanks for uncovering that Mr. Galbraith is just another establishment ruminate without clothes. The only time that the word "war" appears in naked Mr. Galbraith's rumination is with "World War 2". No word about Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, a.s.o. wars. No suggestion that all soldiers and private contractees in Iraq should have been back home by the summer of 2009 in naked Mr. Galbraith rubric of "what President Obama could have done". No word about Obama's escalations in Afghanistan and Pakistan let alone his drone killings. Whose side is Mr. Galbraith on?
LITTLENUTTY: You're right. I hadn't considered the war cost/factor. Thanks for pointing it out.
CROWSNEST: Interesting point raised in your 3:42 PM post.
"All this talk about economics will not mean a thing UNLESS the economics of Permanent War are factored in." And fuel,food,and climate disruption.
Sometimes you just can't drink enough--MD
All true. Well said.
LittleNutty,
You are the only one here talking about "permanent war". Why is that? Maybe because almost all of our Congress, even our devoted Democrats, voted to give up OUR RIGHTS to President Bush to invade Afghanistan and Iraq. If one believes Google, there are now 11,000 U.S. Intel people for every one Al Qaeda person on the planet. It is as if the Democrats, who are supposed to support justice in the world, have forgotten the words "WAR AND OCCUPATION". Maybe the Dems are making as much as the Repubs on our wars? It is just too depressing to think about, but it seems the only plausible answer.
I am afraid we are destined to go down in flames. At least Galbraith says we ought to go down kicking and screaming all the way.
it's rather the complacently imbecilic armchair left that is clueless here...
obama's tax deal is very positive because it forces the dem.party to at least posture that it "feels" to the left of obama and this posturing will make it harder for establishment demobliRats to continue selling themselves as rightwing-light since the posturing will radicalize the discursive atmosphere even more than what it has already over the last three years (yes, since obama's rise! three years ago nobody main-stream was talking about plutocrats; now even some MSM are quoting antiplutocratic figures!)
obama should expose himself only after most of the dem.party will have moved way further to the left of him at least discursively.
otherwise he would be killed immediately by rightwing assassins hired by the plutocrats, and his successor would be a by-bribe-only demobliRat for sure (ever heard of joseph biden aka "the friend of the usurer"?).
now, why doesn't the dem."left" ask for slick willie's capital-gains tax cut to be abolished as part of obama's deal with the republiRat leeches?
erplus
I am gald you posted here. I think this is a most intelligent observation of what is really taking place in this "theatre". The Democrats have the best position they have had in some time. The public opinion majority supporting their position is 2-1. A legitimate dabate can be had on the issues. There is a superior intelligence at work here. Newt Gingrich just knows the Democratic party can't be this smart.
Mr. Obama is letting our system of checks and balances work. The Republicans have had their victory dance, now its the Democrat's turn, the president still holds the veto pen. Now tell me, why is it yours is one of the few posts to recognize this? Go ahead, tell me. The problem is, we have grown used to cowboys as President and violence and fighting is too much with us.
Be careful. People have been known to get stuck in even rather mild contortions.
OBAMA RESIGN NOW
Yes! I totally agree Donnalou. After his final capitulation to the Repugs, I can no longer see any redeeming qualities in Obama. Sure, he's nice and intelligent, but absolutely clueless in his insistence to find common ground - even when the 'ground' is a spot about 10 ft to the right of the edge of a cliff in thin air.
Obama should resign and then we'd have President Biden - and a chance to change things before the 2012 election (and a chance not lose in 2012 - which we will with Obama unless they run Palin against him - and even then it's not a given he'd win).
Obama has lost his base. He has lost his moral compass and insults the very people who voted for him, who volunteered for him, who gave his campaign money. We actually believed that he'd fight for real Democratic ideals - real healthcare reform, regulation of big business and banks, civil rights and privacy, environmental regulations and support of the middle class. Instead he wanted to give away hundreds of billions of dollars to those who already have too much. It's disgusting.
Yes, Obama, please resign for the good of the country.
Why? Then we get the Senator from MBNA. And if he resigns, we get Little Miss "Get off my lawn, Code Pink hippie scum!" and "Impeachment is off the table!"
And if she resigns, we get Daniel Inouye. Hmm. Maybe he's worth a try? He at least knows there's a shadow government. But I don't know whether he's a part of it.